Haters gonna hate. Aaron Murray will be starting next year (assuming he declares). He'll get off to a rough start I'm sure, but he definitely has the arm and mobility and pocket presence to succeed at the next level. If the Jets get him in the 2nd I'd be thrilled.

People see his size and small frame and make assumptions about his arm. Colt McCoy comps have me scratching my head. He has a very good arm, certainly better than Barkley's and as good if not better than Geno's.

People see his size and small frame and make assumptions about his arm. Colt McCoy comps have me scratching my head. He has a very good arm, certainly better than Barkley's and as good if not better than Geno's.

It's not an assumption. He doesn't have a strong arm. He does not have a stronger arm then Geno Smith.

If I was a Nebraska fan, I might be calling for the entire coaching staff to go. I don't care what the team's record is. It should be a cardinal sin for the University of Nebraska to give up the amount of points they gave up in their losses.

Haters gonna hate. Aaron Murray will be starting next year (assuming he declares). He'll get off to a rough start I'm sure, but he definitely has the arm and mobility and pocket presence to succeed at the next level. If the Jets get him in the 2nd I'd be thrilled.

Careful what you wish for. Of course you being a Jets fan, you'd like what I compared him to yesterday, a cross between Mark Sanchez and Major Applewhite...though I tend to think he is more on the Applewhite side.

If you want to see a real QB prospect, check out Teddy Bridgewater vs. Florida. He's the real deal. He's got good size, very good athleticism, but what is really impressive are his feet in the pocket, his accuracy, and his knowledge of where his receivers are, and perhaps most importantly, he is elevating the play of his less talented team against a much more talented Florida team.

Where do you expect Aaron Murray to end up? I could see him being a solid second round pick. Any other opinions?

I would be surprised if he went before the 3rd round. That being said, I think Murray fans will have to wait until next year to find out. I'm sure the NFL Advisory Board and others close to him haven't been telling him he'll be a first rounder.

I'm a big fan even if a lot aren't. I'll give people that he isn't a extraordinary college QB but I definitely see a lot of traits that make guys successful at the next level in him. His arm isn't the greatest thing in the world but it is still above average. He can zip it down the field fine with good velocity on the ball, and he can also throw a pretty deep ball. He has accuracy with most of his throws but I do think he can work on throwing some intermediate routes and more practice on placing deep balls. For a short guy he finds passing lanes and makes good use of his feet in the pocket to create throwing lanes. His decision making at some points leaves something to be desired but I completely expect that out of a college QB, and that will definitely improve as he has shown improvement in that area. Lastly he has that poise I like in a QB, he stays calm and as we saw he rallied from interceptions to have a very good bowl game against the number one pass defense . I'd take him in the first and this year if I needed a QB I would have him as my #2 or #3 QB.

If I was a Nebraska fan, I might be calling for the entire coaching staff to go. I don't care what the team's record is. It should be a cardinal sin for the University of Nebraska to give up the amount of points they gave up in their losses.

The smart fans like me are saying this but everyone else thinks this team is good because they Win 10 games every year. On topic Murray should struggle because Big 10 Defenses are better than the ones in the SEC, said by terrible Nebraska QB Martinez http://collegefootballtalk.nbcsports...-sec-defenses/

Seriously see him as a backup at the next level,whatever round you spend on that.

Last time I looked into it, about a third of the 2nd string QBs were former first or second round picks.

If there's a run on QBs, like we saw a couple years ago with Locker, Gabbert, and Ponder all going within a few picks, then Murray could be one of those guys who sneaks into the mix. I'm not saying it'll be a first round run on QBs, for the record. Likely a 2nd round run.

Just curious, but who was the last QB to hit the NFL and fail because of his arm? As in, he had the brains, knew where to throw it, understood the offense well, did everything well, but just didn't have the arm?

I guess if a QB can't throw it well physically it may be hard to tell he's good in other aspects, but to me it seems QBs that fail tend to do so for at least some mental related reasons, regardless of their arm. If 'not having the arm' going from college to the pros is a legitimate issue, shouldn't there be plenty of examples where it obviously was the issue?

Just curious, but who was the last QB to hit the NFL and fail because of his arm? As in, he had the brains, knew where to throw it, understood the offense well, did everything well, but just didn't have the arm?

I guess if a QB can't throw it well physically it may be hard to tell he's good in other aspects, but to me it seems QBs that fail tend to do so for at least some mental related reasons, regardless of their arm. If 'not having the arm' going from college to the pros is a legitimate issue, shouldn't there be plenty of examples where it obviously was the issue?

To add to your point, Andrew Luck and Peyton Manning weren't exactly known for their arms.

Would I be totally out of line to suggest that the vast majority of QBs who can succeed in college have an adequate arm (strength wise) for the NFL, and assuming they can master the other aspects of the position, they are going to be a good pro? Considering that ball velocity etc can be improved with technique and training.

I tend to think arm strength is such a horribly overrated attribute that it should basically be struck from the lexicon of the draft analyst, only to be brought up in extreme cases, or when a prospect is so complete, he also happens to posses a strong arm. It seems to me it offers no avenue for success to the mentally incapable prospect, and it also offers no realistic guarantee of failure for the otherwise good prospect. So, why then is it even a topic of discussion?

Just curious, but who was the last QB to hit the NFL and fail because of his arm? As in, he had the brains, knew where to throw it, understood the offense well, did everything well, but just didn't have the arm?

I guess if a QB can't throw it well physically it may be hard to tell he's good in other aspects, but to me it seems QBs that fail tend to do so for at least some mental related reasons, regardless of their arm. If 'not having the arm' going from college to the pros is a legitimate issue, shouldn't there be plenty of examples where it obviously was the issue?

I think Georgia QB Aaron Murray is one of the most overrated prospects that I've seen in a while. Is it just because of his high school press clippings? I think Round 3 would be his ceiling, especially this year. Lots of physical shortcomings plus an inconsistent track record.

I totally agree, round 3 at best for him. He is terribly inconsistent.

And by the way, the only long throw Murray made the other day that had any degree of difficult to it (the others were strictly YAC), he underthrew badly and the WR showed off his inability to go up and get the ball and got lucky with a basket catch. The throw was an indictment of Murray's arm and accuracy and King's lack of ball skills (at least on that play). That throw should've been an easy INT.